Information-Theoretic Limits of Strategic Communication
Mael Le Treust, Tristan Tomala

TL;DR
This paper explores the limits of strategic communication over noisy channels, combining concepts from information theory and game theory to characterize optimal encoding strategies when encoder and decoder have different objectives.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework for strategic source-channel coding with distinct encoder and decoder goals, linking information theory with Bayesian persuasion.
Findings
Single-letter solution characterization
Encoding may be optimal without full resource utilization
Utility functions influence encoding strategies
Abstract
In this article, we investigate strategic information transmission over a noisy channel. This problem has been widely investigated in Economics, when the communication channel is perfect. Unlike in Information Theory, both encoder and decoder have distinct objectives and choose their encoding and decoding strategies accordingly. This approach radically differs from the conventional Communication paradigm, which assumes transmitters are of two types: either they have a common goal, or they act as opponent, e.g. jammer, eavesdropper. We formulate a point-to-point source-channel coding problem with state information, in which the encoder and the decoder choose their respective encoding and decoding strategies in order to maximize their long-run utility functions. This strategic coding problem is at the interplay between Wyner-Ziv's scenario and the Bayesian persuasion game of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGame Theory and Applications · Wireless Communication Security Techniques · Advanced Bandit Algorithms Research
